Having released audio-video hard drives in the past (dubbed "AV"), I've long wondered if Western Digital would release a series targeted at one of the most thriving storage markets out there: network-attached storage. Lo and behold, it's happened, making me wish I had jotted that thought down to paper (rather, Notepad... as if I remember how to use paper).

And I'd pick this drive over a Black... why? Yeah, this seems more like a step back than forward to be honest, RE4 and Black already filled this role. I guess they wanted a slightly more expensive Green drive, which doesn't drop connections when it power-saves.

Next they'll probably reduce the warranty on the Black drives to make them cheaper.

For your additional money over the green drives you're basically picking up 1yr more warranty and an improved MTBF and losing some circuitry. True, the circuitry lost isn't needed if you do RAID. If not, is it going to be a detriment to not have on board error correction?

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Some other stuff,
Even more stuff,
If the automobile had followed the same development cycle as the computer, a Rolls-Royce would today cost $100, get a million miles per gallon, and explode once a year, killing everyone inside. --Robert X. Cringely, InfoWorld magazine

For your additional money over the green drives you're basically picking up 1yr more warranty and an improved MTBF and losing some circuitry. True, the circuitry lost isn't needed if you do RAID. If not, is it going to be a detriment to not have on board error correction?

No circuitry has been removed from the drives, rather it's just that the firmware has been tweaked to reduce this time-out issue with NAS boxes. These are not drives I'd use on the desktop, unless you're connecting it to a RAID controller.

From what I understand, there are ways to mimic the time-limited error recovery (TLER) on Green drives with WD's own tool, but regardless, the Red drives carry the beefier warranty and slightly improved specs for NAS use.

No circuitry has been removed from the drives, rather it's just that the firmware has been tweaked to reduce this time-out issue with NAS boxes. These are not drives I'd use on the desktop, unless you're connecting it to a RAID controller.

From what I understand, there are ways to mimic the time-limited error recovery (TLER) on Green drives with WD's own tool, but regardless, the Red drives carry the beefier warranty and slightly improved specs for NAS use.

I wasn't talking about for desktop use, for a NAS box. I've met people that don't do RAID for various reasons such as cost or complexity which is why I asked. For a desktop system I'd use a WD blue drive. Better performance than the green drives and better cost than the black drives. Win/win.

__________________
M5A99FX Pro Rev 2.0
Phenom II 955 Black Edition quad core @ 3.5Ghz
2X4 Gigs G Skill F3-14900CL8-4GBXM
EVGA GTX 760
Buncha drives,
Cooler Master HAF XB EVO,
Corsair H100i,
Some other stuff,
Even more stuff,
If the automobile had followed the same development cycle as the computer, a Rolls-Royce would today cost $100, get a million miles per gallon, and explode once a year, killing everyone inside. --Robert X. Cringely, InfoWorld magazine

I agree on the Blue drives. For NAS use, I don't think the removal of TLER is going to hurt, even if just one drive is being used (it's still going through a RAID, in a JBOD configuration, I guess).

With this announcement I noticed that drive prices have come down quite a bit, but we're still not at pre-Thailand levels. The 2TB Green before the flood was about $90, and now it's $120. That's a LOOOT better than the $200+ that it was after the floods. Still would love to see it go back to "normal".

Hmm, I just noticed something. I figured that these were called "WD Red" and not "WD Caviar Red" because they're not desktop drives, but on WD's website, -no- drives are listed as Caviar anymore, or Momentus on the desktop side. I wonder when that change-over happened?

Ok, so after reading into the drive a bit, it definitely fills a niche and has its purpose. Its performance is mostly on par with Blues and even Black in some cases. After reading into the TLER feature, it makes sense now. When in RAID, like a RAID 5, a normal drive hits a bad sector, it will keep trying to read it, the controller picks up on this long lead time, then declares the drive dead and begins to rebuild that sector. With TLER on the drive, it makes only a few passes, then says the data is corrupt, the controller then rebuilds the sector and everything carries on as per normal, without the drive declared 'dead'. TLER is only on the RE4 drive, but now the Red too.

So, great drive for real RAID (i.e. not RAID 0), not so great for normal system use. The other feature of the drive is its built-in balance mechanism, which allows it to maintain higher performance. The other downside is the higher seek times due to various mechanisms to reduce noise and prolong life.

I'm still iffy over the reduced warranty, but hey, at least I know what it's good for now (not just a price war).